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Ocean Currents

Category: GS-1 (Geography), GS-3 (Environment)


1. What are Ocean Currents?

Ocean currents are continuous, large-scale, directional movements of seawater, comparable to river flows in oceans. These movements can be horizontal (currents) or vertical (upwelling/downwelling), driven by several environmental forces.

2. Factors Influencing Ocean Currents

Primary Forces

Secondary Forces

3. Types of Ocean Currents

By Depth

By Temperature

4. Major Ocean Currents

Current Type Region Remarks
Gulf Stream Warm North Atlantic Western intensified, keeps Europe warm
Labrador Current Cold North Atlantic Meets Gulf Stream; rich fishing zones
Canary Current Cold North Africa Promotes desertification (Sahara)
North Atlantic Drift Warm Europe Extension of Gulf Stream
Peru (Humboldt) Current Cold West South America Major upwelling; El Niño impact zone
Brazil Current Warm East South America Meets Falkland Current, temperate sea
Falkland (Malvinas) Current Cold South Atlantic Part of ACC; affects Argentina's climate
California Current Cold West North America Upwelling; fishing zones
Kuroshio (Japan) Current Warm West Pacific Gulf Stream of Pacific
Oyashio Current Cold East Asia Rich in nutrients, collides with Kuroshio
Agulhas Current Warm East Africa Fastest western boundary current
Benguela Current Cold Southwest Africa Famous upwelling zone
Somali Current Warm Indian Ocean Monsoon-driven seasonal current
East Australian Current Warm East Australia Sub-tropical marine fauna transport
West Australian Current Cold Western Australia Part of West Wind Drift
Equatorial Currents Warm Global Equator Includes North, South Equatorial and Counter Currents
Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC) Cold Southern Ocean Only unbroken current around globe

5. Effects of Ocean Currents


UPSC Potential Questions

MCQs for Quick Revision

Q1. Which one of the following ocean currents is a cold current?

Q2. The meeting of which two currents causes dense fog near Newfoundland?

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